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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz
Capítulo 12, Página 14
“I’m
very
sorry,
indeed,”
said
Dorothy,
who
was
truly
frightened
to
see
the
Witch
actually
melting
away
like
brown
sugar
before
her
very
eyes.
“Didn’t
you
know
water
would
be
the
end
of
me?”
asked
the
Witch,
in
a
wailing,
despairing
voice.
“Of
course
not,”
answered
Dorothy.
“How
should
I?”
“Well,
in
a
few
minutes
I
shall
be
all
melted,
and
you
will
have
the
castle
to
yourself.
I
have
been
wicked
in
my
day,
but
I
never
thought
a
little
girl
like
you
would
ever
be
able
to
melt
me
and
end
my
wicked
deeds.
Look
out—here
I
go!”
With
these
words
the
Witch
fell
down
in
a
brown,
melted,
shapeless
mass
and
began
to
spread
over
the
clean
boards
of
the
kitchen
floor.
Seeing
that
she
had
really
melted
away
to
nothing,
Dorothy
drew
another
bucket
of
water
and
threw
it
over
the
mess.
She
then
swept
it
all
out
the
door.
After
picking
out
the
silver
shoe,
which
was
all
that
was
left
of
the
old
woman,
she
cleaned
and
dried
it
with
a
cloth,
and
put
it
on
her
foot
again.
Then,
being
at
last
free
to
do
as
she
chose,
she
ran
out
to
the
courtyard
to
tell
the
Lion
that
the
Wicked
Witch
of
the
West
had
come
to
an
end,
and
that
they
were
no
longer
prisoners
in
a
strange
land.
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El Maravilloso Mago de Oz — B2 Inglés | Cuentana